Duma Key

Duma Key
First edition cover
Author Stephen King
Country United States
Language English
Genre Psychological horror
Horror fiction
Publisher Scribner
Publication date
January 22, 2008
Media type Print (hardcover)
Pages 611
ISBN 978-1-4165-5251-2

Duma Key is a novel by American writer Stephen King published on January 22, 2008 by Scribner. The book reached #1 on the New York Times Best Seller List. It is King's first novel to be set in Florida and/or Minnesota. The dust jacket features holographic lettering.

Plot

Edgar Freemantle, a contractor in St. Paul, Minnesota, barely survives a horrific on-site accident where his truck is crushed by a crane. Freemantle's right arm is amputated, and severe injuries to his head cause Edgar to have problems with speech, vision, and memory. As a result, Edgar also has violent mood swings and thoughts of suicide. During one of those mood swings, he attacks his wife, who later cites that as a main reason why she divorced him.

On the advice of his psychologist, Dr. Kamen, Edgar takes "a geographical": a year-long vacation meant for rest and further recovery. He decides to rent a beach house on Duma Key, a small island off the west coast of Florida, after reading about it in a travel brochure. Edgar's beach house is located on a part of the island called Salmon Point; Edgar nicknames the house "Big Pink," because of its rich pink color. On the advice of Dr. Kamen, Edgar revives his old hobby of sketching after he moves into Big Pink. He settles in with the help of Jack Cantori, a local college student.

Edgar becomes obsessively involved in his art, painting with a furious energy and in a daze. Edgar brings up psychic images in his paintings; he learns by painting these visions that his younger daughter, Ilse, is engaged to a choir singer and that his ex-wife is having an affair with his former accountant. While exploring the island with a visiting Ilse, Edgar drives past an elderly woman, Elizabeth Eastlake. Ilse becomes violently ill as they drive into an overgrown part of the island. Elizabeth later calls Edgar, warning him that Duma Key "has never been a lucky place for daughters". Edgar initially disregards the message, since Eastlake has Alzheimer's disease.

Edgar slowly recuperates, helped in part by taking longer and longer walks along the beach. He slowly approaches and eventually meets and befriends a man in his late 40's, whom Freemantle had seen sitting under an umbrella off in the distance. Edgar eventually reaches him and he is introduced as Jerome Wireman. Wireman is the hired companion of Miss Eastlake, who turns out to be very wealthy and the owner of half of Duma Key (with the remaining half of the island's ownership in dispute). Over the coming weeks, Edgar and Wireman develop a close friendship. Edgar comes to believe, and Wireman later confirms, that Wireman has some psychic abilities. Both Edgar and Wireman suspect that their psychic abilities are due to their both having sustained brain injuries (Wireman tried to commit suicide years earlier by shooting himself) and that Duma Key amplifies such abilities.

The way Edgar paints becomes systematic: he gets a phantom-limb sensation and he paints a psychic image, sometimes doing so while in a trance-like state, and becomes ravenously hungry afterwards. He eventually compiles a large catalog of artwork and is convinced first to try to show his work by his daughter, Ilse, and Wireman. Miss Eastlake also insists to Edgar that Duma Key has a certain power and that his work should not remain on the island, or at least that he should not allow too many works to remain on the island at once. His work is appraised and found exceptional and a show is planned to exhibit and then sell his work. While Edgar works with the art gallery and Wireman planning the exhibition, Edgar gradually begins to understand that his paintings have a paranormal power that allow him to manipulate events, places, and people. First Edgar paints a portrait of Candy Brown (a man accused of raping and murdering a young girl in a highly publicized case) that apparently causes him to die suddenly in his prison cell. In an experiment to confirm this power, Edgar works for days on a painting of Wireman. Via this painting, the bullet that was lodged in Wireman's brain disappears, restoring Wireman's vision, but also erasing any of his psychic abilities. Miss Eastlake, in one of her periodic clear spells where her Alzheimer's recedes, is insistent that Edgar should sell all of his pieces at the exhibition and that one particular series of paintings should be broken up and sold to different people due to the power they possess.

Elizabeth makes a surprise appearance at the exhibition, and after seeing the paintings herself for the first time becomes distressed and tells Edgar a number of things, including that the "table is leaking". Elizabeth suffers a violent seizure, as she is trying to tell Edgar this, and dies in the hospital soon after. When Edgar returns to Duma the next day he discovers that Big Pink was broken into and finds a canvas with "Where our sister?" scrawled on it, left in the house along with the footprints of an adult and two children. He soon discovers that those in possession of his paintings either die, or become possessed by "Perse" and carry out her deeds, which mainly include killing people close to Edgar. Most notably, Mary Ire, who had purchased one of a series of "Girl and Ship" paintings, breaks into Ilse's apartment and kills her by drowning her in her bathtub (just minutes after Ilse burns "The End of The Game" at Edgar's request). Mary Ire commits suicide almost instantly thereafter. Edgar suspects that Perse silenced Elizabeth.

Edgar begins to realize that his paintings are connected to tragic events in Miss Eastlake's childhood. Edgar discovers, through both his paintings and the drawings done by a young Elizabeth after she had suffered a head injury and began drawing herself, that Elizabeth had inadvertently used her paintings to discover a figurine off of the coast of Duma Key. This figurine, of a red-cowled woman, used the young Elizabeth to begin changing the reality around her. Elizabeth tried to use her power to destroy the figurine by drawing it and then erasing it. This only enraged the entity Persephone, which then killed Elizabeth's twin sisters by leading them into the surf and drowning them. A young Elizabeth, with the help of her Nanny, eventually discovered that the entity could be neutralized by drowning her in freshwater, and Elizabeth was able to do this by placing the figurine in a cask that is sealed in a cistern under the original house on Duma Key.

Intent on putting a stop to Perse following the death of his beloved daughter, Edgar, along with Wireman and Jack, travels to the house Elizabeth lived in as a child, which is now overgrown by thick and unnatural vegetation. They manage to find the figurine, and are able to contain it in freshwater inside one of their flashlights. Later, Edgar takes the flashlight back to Big Pink, where his daughter Ilse begins to form out of the sand and seashells under the house. The entity offers Edgar immortality and forgetfulness in exchange for the flashlight. Edgar, however, has a different flashlight and tricks the entity masquerading as his daughter to get close enough for him to destroy it. Later, Edgar and Wireman drop the figurine into one of the freshwater lakes of Minnesota.

The book ends with Edgar starting his final painting: a storm destroying Duma Key.

Paintings

A number of Edgar's paintings play significant roles in the novel and are described in great detail, both in their creation and how they look, beginning with his very first extensive drawing upon arrival at Big Pink, a ghostly picture of a ship on the sunset titled Hello. He quickly experiments with a number of sunsets, which all fail to match up to "Hello".

Although moving slowly at first, he rapidly increases in talent and figures out how to replicate the surrealism of his first drawing by adding objects hovering in the background of the sunsets, beginning with his Sunset with Conch. As he finds out from one of the novel characters, he lives in the house where Salvador Dalí stayed in the latter part of his life, having an affair with Elizabeth Eastlake.

Characters

Edgar Freemantle
The central character in the book, which focuses on his struggles and he eventually takes the lead in the climatic fight against Perse.
Jerome Wireman
A former lawyer from Omaha who moved down to Florida after losing his wife and daughter, surviving a suicide attempt, and being fired from his law firm.
Elizabeth Eastlake
A wealthy heiress and former art patron suffering from Alzheimers, she plays a major role in background of the story and in leading the protagonists to stopping the evil force present on the island.
Pam Freemantle
Edgar's wife who divorces him at the beginning of the novel. During the novel she has several affairs, but gradually reconciles with him until the events of the climax begin.
Ilse Freemantle
Edgar's younger daughter who remains the only person from his "past life" to stay close to him and who is the person he loves most in the world.
Jack Cantori
A local college student who serves as Edgar's chauffeur and handyman, keeping the house stocked with groceries and picking up whatever odds and ends he needs. It is his quick thinking that allows them to trap Perse at the end of the novel.
Perse
The evil force manifested on Duma Key, she first reached out through young Elizabeth Eastlake to get back to the surface from the ocean before being trapped in freshwater (she is left powerless by it), until the present day. She commands a ship of damned souls, and while not human is said to have something distinctly feminine about her, and she is manifest in an old china doll with a red cloak. She is again put back to sleep at the end of the novel though the characters fear she will eventually escape again. Her full name, Persephone and her description and place are all generally influenced and taken from the Greek Goddess Persephone, the Queen of the Underworld.

Minor characters

There are a large number of minor characters in the book who have only passing significance to the main characters or to the plot of the book, including large numbers of friends and family from Edgar's "other life" as well as Wireman's family and boss, a number of characters with loose association to the two, and the various people who rent houses on Duma Key during the tourism season.

Critics mainly liked the book. King told USA Today that "a lot of today's reviewers grew up reading my fiction. Most of the old critics who panned anything I wrote are either dead or retired".[1]

The New York Times critic Janet Maslin called the novel "frank and well grounded" and lauded the brevity and imagery of the novel, as well as the furious pace of the last third,[2]. Mark Rahner of the Seattle Times criticised King being a little unoriginal and longwinded, but praised the characters and the terror of the novel.[3]

Richard Rayner in the Los Angeles Times called the novel a "beautiful, scary idea" with gritty down-to-earth characters. "[King] writes as always with energy and drive and a wit and grace for which critics often fail to give him credit [but] the creepy and largely interior terror of the first two-thirds of the story dissipates somewhat when demon sailors come clanking out of the ocean."[4] The Boston Globe's Erica Noonan called the novel a "welcome return" to a similar style of some King's better novels.[5]

See also

  • Memory, a related short story by King. King describes it as "the first chapter of Duma Key all kind of dressed up" in the Lilja's Library interview.
  • Alan Wake, a 2010 video game with a similar premise to Duma Key. King's work is repeatedly referenced during the game.

References

  1. Minzesheimer, Bob (23 January 2008). "'Duma Key' finds Stephen King stepping into his own life". USA Today. Retrieved 2013-12-19.
  2. Maslin, Janet (21 January 2008). "Darkness in the Land of Steady Sunshine". The New York Times. Retrieved 2013-12-19.
  3. Rahner, Mark (22 January 2008). "Stephen King's absorbing new thriller, 'Duma Key'". The Seattle Times. Retrieved 2013-12-19.
  4. Rayner, Richard (21 January 2008). "Fear with the familiar twists". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2013-12-19.
  5. Noonan, Erica (19 January 2008). "King finds fright on Florida's coast". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 2013-12-19.
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